Americans
see individual pieces of geopolitical real estate in isolation, like hotels on
the Monopoly board, while the Russians look at the interaction of all their
spheres of interest around the globe.
Syria
is of no real strategic interest to Russia, nor to anyone else for that matter.
It is a broken wreck of a country, with an irreparably damaged economy, without
the energy, water, or food to maintain long-term economic viability. The
multiethnic melange left in place by British and French cartographers after the
First World War has broken down irreparably into a war of mutual extermination,
whose only result can be depopulation or partition on the Yugoslav model.
Syria
only has importance in so far as its crisis threatens to spill over into
surrounding territories which have more strategic importance. As a Petri dish
for jihadist movements, it threatens to become the training ground for a new
generation of terrorists, serving the same role that Afghanistan did during the
1990s and 2000s.
As
a testing ground for the use of weapons of mass destruction, it provides a
diplomatic laboratory to gauge the response of world powers to atrocious
actions with comparatively little risk to the participants. It is an incubator
of national movements, in which, for example, the newfound freedom of action
for the country's 2 million Kurds constitutes a means of destabilizing Turkey
and other countries with substantial Kurdish minorities. Most important, as the
cockpit of confessional war between Sunnis and Shi'ite, Syria may become the
springboard for a larger conflict engulfing Iraq and possibly other states in
the region.
I
do not know what Putin wants in Syria. I do not believe that at this point
Russia's president knows what he wants in Syria, either. A strong chess player
engaging an inferior opponent will create complications without an immediate
strategic objective, in order to provoke blunders from the other side and take
opportunistic advantage. There are many things that Putin wants. But he wants
one big thing above all, namely, the restoration of Russia's great power
status. Russia's leading diplomatic role in Syria opens several options to
further this goal.
As
the world's largest energy producer, Russia wants to enhance its leverage over
Western Europe for which it is the principle energy supplier. It wants to
influence the marketing of natural gas produced by Israel and other countries
in the Eastern Mediterranean. It wants to make other energy producers in the
region dependent on its good graces for the security of their energy exports.
It wants to enhance its role as a supplier of military equipment, challenging
the American F-35 and F-22 with the new Sukhoi T-50 stealth fighter among other
things. It wants a free hand in dealing with terrorism among its Muslim
minority in the Caucasus. And it wants to maintain influence in its so-called
near abroad in Central Asia.
American
commentators reacted with surprise and in some cases dismay to Russia's
emergence as the arbiter of the Syria crisis. In fact, Russia's emerging role
in the region was already evident when the chief of Saudi intelligence, Prince
Bandar, flew to Moscow during the first week of August to meet with Putin. The
Russians and Saudis announced that they would collaborate to stabilize the new
military government in Egypt, in direct opposition to the Obama administration.
In effect Russia offered to sell Egypt any weapons that the United States declined
to sell, while Saudi Arabia offered to pay for them.
That
was a diplomatic revolution without
clear precedent. It is not only that the Russians have returned to Egypt 40
years after they were expelled in the context of the real world war; they have
done so in tactical alliance with Saudi Arabia, historically Russia's nemesis
in the region.
Saudi Arabia has an urgent interest in stabilizing Egypt, and in suppressing the Muslim Brotherhood, which the Saudi monarchy nightly views as a risk to its legitimacy. Saudi support for the Egyptian military against the Brotherhood is not surprising; what is most surprising is that the Saudi's felt to involve Russia.
Saudi Arabia has an urgent interest in stabilizing Egypt, and in suppressing the Muslim Brotherhood, which the Saudi monarchy nightly views as a risk to its legitimacy. Saudi support for the Egyptian military against the Brotherhood is not surprising; what is most surprising is that the Saudi's felt to involve Russia.
Although
there are a number of obvious reasons for the Saudi's and Russians to
collaborate, for example controlling the jihadists in the Syrian opposition, we
do not yet understand the full implications of their rapprochement. The Saudis
leaked news that they had offered to buy $15 billion worth of Russian weapons
in return for Russian help with Assad. Rumors of this kind should not be read
at face value. They might be misdirection - but misdirection towards what?
Putin's
chessboard encompasses the globe. It includes such things as the security of
energy exports from the Persian Gulf; the transmission of oil and gas through
Central Asia; the market for Russian arms exports; energy negotiations now
underway between Russia and China; the vulnerability of Europe's energy
supplies; and the internal stability of countries on or near Russia's borders,
including Turkey, Iraq and Iran.
For
American analysts, most of this chessboard might as well be on the dark side of
the moon. We see only what the Russians permit us to see. For example, Moscow
first promised to provide Syria with the S-300 air defense system and then
withdrew its offer. Saudi Arabia in early August let it be known that it was
prepared to buy $15 billion of Russian weapons in return for considerations in
Syria. A negotiation of some kind is underway, but we have no idea what kind of
carrots and sticks might be involved.
What
we may surmise is that Russia now has much greater capacity to influence events
in the Middle East, including the security of energy resources, that it has at
any time since the Yom Kippur War of 1973. For the time being, it is in
Russia's interest to keep its interlocutory guessing, and to enhance its future
strategic options. Russia in effect has placed the burden of uncertainty on the
rest of the world, especially upon major economies dependent on Persian Gulf
energy exports.
President
Obama evidently considers this arrangement beneficial to his own agenda. The
president has no interest whatever in enhancing America's strategic position in
the world; his intent may be to diminish it, as Norman Podhoretz charged
in the Wall Street Journal last week, and I argued five years ago. Obama is focused on his domestic agenda.
From
that standpoint, handing over responsibility for the Syrian mess is a riskless
exercise. American popular revulsion over foreign military intervention is so
intense that the voters will welcome any measure that reduces American
responsibility for foreign problems. Although the elite of the Democratic Party
are liberal internationalists, Obama's voting support has scant interest in
Syria.
Public
commentary on foreign policy is an exercise in frustration under the
circumstances. Because America is a democracy, and substantial commitment of
resources requires at least some degree of consensus, diplomacy was
exceptionally transparent so long as America dominated the field. Think tanks,
academia and the media served as a sounding board for any significant
initiatives, so that important decisions were taken at least in part in the
view of the public. That is no longer the case on Vladimir Putin's chessboard.
Russia will pursue a set of strategic trade-offs, but we in the West will not
know what they are until well after the fact, if ever.
Further
dimensions of complexity will arise from the eventual response of other
prospective players, in particular China, but also including Japan. The
self-shrinkage of America's strategic position eliminates the constraint for
Russia to choose a particular option. On the contrary, Russia can accumulate
positional advantages to employ for particular strategic objectives at its
leisure. And Putin will sit silent on his side of the chessboard and let the
clock run against his opponent.
Putin
may think that he is pre-empting a similar strategy on the part of the West. Fyodor Lukanov wrote
on the AI Monitor website last March:
From Russian
leadership's point of view, the Iraq War now looks like the beginning of the
accelerated destruction of regional and global stability, undermining the last
principles of sustainable world order. Everything that's happened since -
including flirting with Islamists during the Arab Spring, US policies in Libya
and its current policies in Syria - serve as evidence of strategic insanity
that has taken over the last remaining superpower.
Russia's
persistence on the Syrian issue is the product of this perception. The issue is
not sympathy for Syria's dictator, nor commercial interests, nor naval bases in
Tartus. Moscow is certain that if continued crushing of secular authoritarian
regimes is allowed because America and the West support "democracy",
it will lead to such destabilization that will overwhelm all, including Russia.
It's therefore necessary for Russia to resist, especially as the West and the
United States themselves experience increasing doubts.
Russians
typically assume that Americans think the way they do, gauging every move by
the way it affects the overall position on the board. The notion that
incompetence rather than conspiracy explains the vast majority of American
actions is foreign to Russian thinking. Whatever the Russian leader thinks,
though, he will keep to himself.
After
12 years of writing on foreign policy in this space, I have nothing more to
say. The Obama administration has handed the strategic initiative to countries
whose policy-making proceeds behind a wall of opacity. Robert Frost's words
come to mind:
As for the evil tidings Belshazzar's overthrow Why hurry to tell Belshazzar What he soon enough will know?
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